The New Yorker, 2005-05-09
May. 19th, 2005 05:00 pm"A Little Learning" / Jeffrey Goldberg
'(Doug Feith) was indefatigable in his own defense'.
"Bitter Bamboo" / John Updike
- (On Su Tong's "My life as Emperor"): a shrugging, dandyish tone... (his) morbid fantasia wears an opaque lacquer of willful elegance
- Like Voltaire's "Candide", this parade of misfortunes ends with a garden.
- Their wanton weakness and self-absorption, and the natural poetry
both are capable of, rebuke the societies that have made life on earth
hellish. Bad societies offer no incentive to grow up.
"Parked Cars" / Peter Schjeldahl (c.f.)
- (On Robert Bechtle's photo-realist "'61 Pointiac"): I sense the droning, sheer duration of days in suburban neighborhoods in mild climates, an immensity laced with a familiar terror: boredom, our foretaste of being dead. .. Bechtle is a fascinated diver in the ocean of interminable American afternoons.
- Bechtle’s paintings do not yield first impressions. I immediately feel that I know them thoroughly, as if from a prior life. This may be an effect of their congruence with the sorts of things that the brain, in self-defense, refuses to remember. .. Bechtle zeroes in on the always seen and never noticed—without giving it importance.
- “Alameda Gran Torino” (1974), a masterpiece, is a nova of banality. The station wagon can’t help but be only and exactly what Detroit fashioned... A closeness between the green of the car and that of a background shadow is unusual, but so perfectly meaningless that your mind may panic at the waste of its energy in beholding the fact. Then something peculiar can happen: your reflexive sense of the picture as a photograph breaks down, and the object’s identity as a painting, done entirely on purpose, gains ground... The whole work is a feat of resourceful painterly artifice. At last, it’s as if the original photograph were a ghost that died and came back as a body.
- Life is incredibly complicated, and the proof is that when you confront any simple, stopped part of it you are stupefied.
"Personal Battles" / Anthony Lane:
'There's something ungrounded about the (uberkids), a reluctance to verse themselves in the ways of the world.'